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Consumer Watchdog Praises State Attorneys General Action Against Google

2/22/2012

Contact Info

Name:

John M. Simpson

Phone Number:

310-392-7041

SANTA MONICA, CA --- Consumer Watchdog today praised state attorneys general for voicing their concerns about Google’s changes in privacy polices and asking for a meeting with the Internet giant’s CEO Larry Page.

Attorneys general from 35 other states and territories joined Maryland Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler in sending the letter. They gave Google a week to reply.

“I am deeply concerned about Google’s effort to push a major privacy change on consumers without giving them the choice to opt in, or at a minimum the opportunity to opt out,” said Attorney General Gansler. “After years of touting its commitment to meaningful privacy choices for its users, Google should abide by its claimed privacy principles and let consumers decide whether to say ‘No thanks’ to a new policy.”

“We’re pleased the state attorneys general have weighed in on this important issue,” said John M. Simpson, Consumer Watchdog’s Privacy Policy director. “Google has spun the new polices as ‘improving user experience.’ In fact it’s about amassing even greater digital dossiers about you. You’re not Google’s customer, you’re Google’s product.”

Google's new policy, effective March 1, will combine more than 60 privacy policies across services including Search, Gmail and YouTube. Previously, data was kept separate in each of Google's services. These new combined digital dossiers are tremendously powerful for targeting ads, something that Google does not mention, Consumer Watchdog said.

Consumer Watchdog has also called on the House Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade Subcommittee to hold hearings on Google’s new privacy policy. The group said the new policy violates Google’s “Buzz” Consent Agreement with the Federal Trade Commission.

Last week in the wake of a Stanford University researcher’s study that found Google has been violating people’s online privacy choices, Consumer Watchdog said the Internet giant was lying to users and called for the Federal Trade Commission to act.